A corn snake breeder shows off one of her prize snakes. Note the docility, practically a comatose state, of this specimen.

“These snakes are amaizeing”

~ Jungle Jack Hanna on Corn snakes

The corn snake (cornius snakus) is a snake that bears an uncanny, although completely superficial, resemblance to corn. This feature is thought by zoologists to aid in camouflage. Furthermore, the corn snake, unlike corn, is perfectly harmless unless eaten (upon consumption of a corn snake a human being must immediately began feeling around their teeth with their finger and tongue, attempting to remove the renments of the snake from between their teeth). Whilst commonly kept as pets, this particular species is still banned from transport on passenger airlines due to a tragic incidence of corn on a plane.

Contents

Adaptations

Corn snakes are medium sized snakes (i.e not as small as an little snake but not half as big as a really big tree). It feeds by sucking the sap out of corn plants and corn kernels, and, although native to North and Central America, is now a common pest to farmers worldwide.

The Corn Snake in American Indian mythology

The following was roughly translated from an ancient American Indian tapestry found in a cave in what is now Arizona:

"When Great Spirit made corn, She made corn snake to slither beside corn, in sky and ground corn snake and corn mingle spirits. To kill corn snake destroys season's corn crop, but to embrace corn snake as one would embrace a mate brings much rain and no locusts. Well, some locusts. So embrace often, and lay with all manner of corn snake, may the trees sing of this love and take vids of this embrace. --Chief Lookoveryonda

Totem's from all across North and Central America bare witness that this attitude was shared by all tribes, and the term "snake", or "trouser snake", when used as a graphic physical reference, harkens back to this practice.

Fear and loathing of corn snakes

Revulsion on the face of a man as a corn snake crawls across his mouth. Its clear sun-sweat is mildly toxic.

Historically, aside from the American Indian, many cultures have a deep fear of corn snakes. Their strange molting renmants, which resemble large leaves with tiny yellow strings attached, are typically avoided.

The fear of corn snakes may arise from a psychological fear of the male genitalia which, as some know, develops yellow bumps and a bendable inner-core when stimulated.

Just as unexpectedly seeing a large spider elicits an automatic nervous-system response and a release of flight-or-fight chemicals, when a corn snake jumps out at someone or crawls across their face at a picnic (pictured) their brain releases hormones which trigger a desire to dip the snake in boiling water for 15 minutes.

Varieties

In their estimated 327 million years of existence, corn snakes have evolved into a huge number of varieties. For example, one common form, the pop corn snake, will protect itself when attacked by internally heating the water within its body, expanding in an instant to many times its normal size. This usually scares the predator off, although its arch enemy, the Southeastern Moviegoer (a noctural rodent who eats in the dark), will continue its attack and usually consumes its prey.

Here are some of the more common corn snakes, compiled and photographed by the Reptilian Department of the University of Arizona:

News footage of a man picking up a pop corn snake, with typical results. Watch the eyes, friend.

Corn snake attacks

A cow under attack by a swarm of corn snakes. Notice how they not only try to bite and devour the body, but their useless venom creates rapid colour changes in the cows skin due to embarrassment. This is not painful, according to humans who have been unsuccessfully bitten. More like a warm breeze which leaves the skin multi-hued and covered with flowers.

Bites by individual corn snakes do little harm, and the snakes themselves are easily detected and knocked aside with a whisk of a hand, paw, or tail. It is only when corn snakes swarm a victim that the danger of extreme itching occurs.

Corn swarm, the common term for an attack by multiple corn snakes, is rarely seen and has been photographed only three times: In 1903, during a swarm on an anteater; in 1977, when a cow was swarmed in India, and that one time they swarmed a gibbon.

In popular culture

The corn snake was on the national flag of Kuwait until 1961, when Kuwait was stolen from Iraq and got a little more serious.

The 1840s song, Jimmy Crack Corn, tells of an American slave who breaks the spine of a corn snake while laying around the porch of the big house. His master gone away, and onlookers didn't care about the corn snake. This shows the indifference slaves held towards the animal kingdom in general and corn snakes in particular. The original lyric, "Jimmy Crack Corn and I don't give a fuck", offended one of the slave women, Dorthea Fuck, and was changed to "and I don't care".